Climate Change (old guide)
Climate Justice
Climate Justice and Environmental Racism
Climate justice begins with the recognition that the impacts of climate change fall most harshly on poor and marginalized people who are least responsible for their creation. In the words of UN Secretary-General António Guterres, “Climate change is happening now and to all of us. No country or community is immune. And, as is always the case, the poor and vulnerable are the first to suffer and the worst hit.” Source: www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/blog/2019/05/climate-justice/
From the NAACP: "Environmental injustice, including the proliferation of climate change, has a disproportionate impact on communities of color and low income communities in the United States and around the world....Toxic facilities, like coal fired power plants and incinerators, emit mercury, arsenic, lead, and other contaminants into the water, food, and lungs of communities. Many of these same facilities also emit carbon dioxide and methane – the #1 and #2 drivers of climate change. At the same time not all are equally impacted. For example, race – even more than class – is the number one indicator for the placement of toxic facilities in this country. And communities of color and low income communities are often the hardest hit by climate change." Source: www.naacp.org/issues/environmental-justice/
Resources:
- Environmental and Climate JusticeFrom the NAACP
- Climate JusticeFrom Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Equity in PCC’s 2021 Climate Action Planning ProcessPCC's Climate Action Plan reflects PCC’s commitment to advancing diversity, equity, inclusion and social justice across the college and within the communities it serves.
- Growing a more equitable urban forest: Portland’s citywide tree planting strategyReport from Portland Parks & Recreation showing that "The current distribution of trees is uneven and is directly linked to income." Dec. 2018
- Indigenous Narratives on Climate Change: InterviewsIndigenous Americans speak out about climate chaos. Curated by the Institute of American Indian Arts Library.
- "Hotter, Drier, Hungrier: How Global Warming Punishes the World’s Poorest"From the New York Times, March 12, 2018
- Pacific Northwest Just Futures Institute for Racial and Climate JusticeThe Center for Environmental Futures (CEF) is an interdisciplinary group of faculty and students that reflects a longstanding investment in environmentalism and social justice at the University of Oregon and in the larger Eugene community.
- Tribal Climate Change ProjectBased at the University of Oregon. "For indigenous peoples, the environmental impacts of climate change and some of the proposed solutions threaten ways of life, subsistence, lands rights, future growth, cultural survivability, and financial resources."
- People of Color Experience Climate Grief More Deeply Than White PeopleBy Nylah Burton, in Vice, May 2020
- What is 'Climate Justice'?From Yale Climate Connections
- Your Climate Anxiety Is Another Person’s Existential CrisisFrom The New Republic, 2020.
- Climate Anxiety Is an Overwhelmingly White PhenomenonBy Sarah Jaquette Ray, published in Scientific American, 2021.
- Which racial/ethnic groups care most about climate change?From Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, 2020.
- As Long As Grass Grows : the indigenous fight for environmental justice from colonization to Standing Rock by Dina Gilio-WhitakerCall Number: Southeast and Sylvania 970.004/97 and ebook
- Climate Change Justice by Eric A. Posner; David WeisbachCall Number: EbookPublication Date: 2010-02-22
- Climate Justice : hope, resilience, and the fight for a sustainable future by Mary RobinsonCall Number: Rock Creek Main Collection 363.7 R63c 2018Publication Date: 2018-09-04
- Working on Earth : class and environmental justice by Christina Robertson; Jennifer WestermanCall Number: Cascade Main Collection 363.7 W67 2015Publication Date: 2015-02-25
- Environmental Racism and Classism by Anne C. Cunningham (Editor)Call Number: Sylvania and Southeast Libraries 363.7 E59 2017Publication Date: 2017-01-01
- Why Climate Change is Unjust5 minute video looking at the history and impact of environmental injustice. PCC Library evideo, 2018.
Intersectional Climate Justice, from PCC Sylvania Multicultural Center (16 minutes)
- Last Updated: Nov 3, 2023 2:07 PM
- URL: https://guides.pcc.edu/c.php?g=923250
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